House Passes Bill Allowing Americans To Be Tracked Via Microchips

December 13, 2016

The house of Representatives passed a bill on Thursday allowing the microchip implantation of American Citizens. They say that it is for “individuals with forms of dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, or other disabilities resulting in a disabled person wandering away from a safe environment.” But, is that what it is really for?

The bill is also known as H.R. 4919 (Kevin and Avonte’s law). It is said to reauthorize the Missing Alzheimer’s Disease Patient Alert Program. The reasoning is to reduce the risk of injury and death to the wandering characteristics of some children with autism. But is this genuinely their purpose? There has been rumor among rumor claiming that the united states are going to start micro-chipping all US citizens. Is this simply the beginning of that?

There once was a rumor spreading like a wildfire via emails, saying that Obama Care (Affordable Care Act) contains mandatory microchip implants and data collections. It claims that says the Obama Care program contains a section that requires the implantation of RFID chip in all Americans by a certain date. The chip allows for data collection from those devices. However, The rumor was dismissed after it was confirmed that the act contained nothing about micro-chipping the public.

Could this new bill, HR 4919, be the revision of what went wrong with the Affordable Care Act’s micro-chipping plan? The bill will of course require the Attorney General to converse with the Secretary of Health and Human Services and other health organizations to come up with the best practices for tracking devices. Texas republican representative said, “While this initiative may have noble intentions, ‘small and temporary’ programs in the name of safety and security often evolve into permanent and enlarged bureaucracies that infringe on the American people’s freedoms. That is exactly what we have here. A safety problem exists for people with Alzheimer’s, autism and other mental health issues, so the fix, we are told, is to have the Department of Justice, start a tracking program so we can use some device or method to track these individuals 24/7,”

The bill might have good intentions from the beginning, but it only takes one corrupt mind in charge of the idea to manipulate it into some fashion of corporate greed. I really do not think there is any need for a microchip to be implanted into a human. Wouldn’t it be just as productive to simply put a tracking device on a necklace, ring, bracelet, or another piece of jewelry and give it to the patient? What do you think?